One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all over. Joinhttp://www.WatchMojo.com as we count down our picks for the Top 10 Japanese Films. Check us out at http://www.Twitter.com/WatchMojo, http://instagram.com/watchmojo and http://www.Facebook.com/WatchMojo. Also, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Special thanks to our users Miroljub Milisavljevic, Charles Parisé, Jimmy McKee, Georgina Bransfield, perryhigh, Jerome Magajes, Matthew Buonaccorsi, Oakley.24, agonstark, Mara Steinhardt and www.google.com/ for submitting the idea on our Suggestions Page at WatchMojo.com/suggest
Check out the voting page here,
http://watchmojo.com/suggest/Top+10+Movies+from+Japan
If you want to suggest an idea for a WatchMojo video, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Want a WatchMojo cup, mug, t-shirts, pen, sticker and even a water bottle? Get them all when you order your MojoBox gift set here:
http://watchmojo.com/store/
WatchMojo is a leading producer of reference online video content, covering the People, Places and Trends you care about.
We update DAILY with 2-3 Top 10 lists, Origins, Biographies, Versus clips on movies, video games, music, pop culture and more!

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of this era and resting the new wave's duration on it in retrospect seems to result in limiting our insight into this exciting and influential era of Japanese cinema. The Japanese new wave was more about a film culture reacting to its traditional heritage, rather than a bunch of like-minded filmmakers launching a movement based on creative/political solidarity - and this cultural reaction was happening long before Shochiku attempted to claim it for a commercial PR campaign. For us, defining this era on what was essentially manufactured, diverts attention from what was so genuine about it.

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata stands on the brink of war.

published:27 Aug 2016

views:77446

List of Japanese films

This is a list of films produced in Japan in year order ordered by decade on separate pages. For an A-Z of films see Category:Japanese films. Also see cinema of Japan.

Top 10 Movies from Japan

One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all over. Joinhttp://www.WatchMojo.com as we count down our picks for the Top 10 Japanese Films. Check us out at http://www.Twitter.com/WatchMojo, http://instagram.com/watchmojo and http://www.Facebook.com/WatchMojo. Also, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Special thanks to our users Miroljub Milisavljevic, Charles Parisé, Jimmy McKee, Georgina Bransfield, perryhigh, Jerome Magajes, Matthew Buonaccorsi, Oakley.24, agonstark, Mara Steinhardt and www.google.com/ for submitting the idea on our Suggestions Page at WatchMojo.com/suggest
Check out the voting page here,
http://watchmojo.com/suggest/Top+10+Movies+from+Japan
If you want to suggest an idea for a WatchMojo video, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Want a WatchMojo cup, mug, t-shirts, pen, sticker and even a water bottle? Get them all when you order your MojoBox gift set here:
http://watchmojo.com/store/
WatchMojo is a leading producer of reference online video content, covering the People, Places and Trends you care about.
We update DAILY with 2-3 Top 10 lists, Origins, Biographies, Versus clips on movies, video games, music, pop culture and more!

The Way to School (Japanese Movie - 2014) - 학교 가는길

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

20 essential Japanese New Wave films

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of this era and resting the new wave's duration on it in retrospect seems to result in limiting our insight into this exciting and influential era of Japanese cinema. The Japanese new wave was more about a film culture reacting to its traditional heritage, rather than a bunch of like-minded filmmakers launching a movement based on creative/political solidarity - and this cultural reaction was happening long before Shochiku attempted to claim it for a commercial PR campaign. For us, defining this era on what was essentially manufactured, diverts attention from what was so genuine about it.

Way of the Ninja (Shinobidô) [Eng-sub] - Japanese Full Movie

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata stands on the brink of war.

Top 10 Movies from Japan

One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all over. Joinhttp://www.WatchMojo.com as we count down our picks for the Top 10 Japanese Films. Check us out at http://www.Twitter.com/WatchMojo, http://instagram.com/watchmojo and http://www.Facebook.com/WatchMojo. Also, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Special thanks to our users Miroljub Milisavljevic, Charles Parisé, Jimmy McKee, Georgina Bransfield, perryhigh, Jerome Magajes, Matthew Buonaccorsi, Oakley.24, agonstark, Mara Steinhardt and www.google.com/ for submitting the idea on our Suggestions Page at WatchMojo.com/suggest
Check out the voting page here,
http://watchmojo.com/sug...

The Way to School (Japanese Movie - 2014) - 학교 가는길

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

20 essential Japanese New Wave films

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of t...

Way of the Ninja (Shinobidô) [Eng-sub] - Japanese Full Movie

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata sta...

Top 10 Movies from Japan

One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all o...

One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all over. Joinhttp://www.WatchMojo.com as we count down our picks for the Top 10 Japanese Films. Check us out at http://www.Twitter.com/WatchMojo, http://instagram.com/watchmojo and http://www.Facebook.com/WatchMojo. Also, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Special thanks to our users Miroljub Milisavljevic, Charles Parisé, Jimmy McKee, Georgina Bransfield, perryhigh, Jerome Magajes, Matthew Buonaccorsi, Oakley.24, agonstark, Mara Steinhardt and www.google.com/ for submitting the idea on our Suggestions Page at WatchMojo.com/suggest
Check out the voting page here,
http://watchmojo.com/suggest/Top+10+Movies+from+Japan
If you want to suggest an idea for a WatchMojo video, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Want a WatchMojo cup, mug, t-shirts, pen, sticker and even a water bottle? Get them all when you order your MojoBox gift set here:
http://watchmojo.com/store/
WatchMojo is a leading producer of reference online video content, covering the People, Places and Trends you care about.
We update DAILY with 2-3 Top 10 lists, Origins, Biographies, Versus clips on movies, video games, music, pop culture and more!

One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all over. Joinhttp://www.WatchMojo.com as we count down our picks for the Top 10 Japanese Films. Check us out at http://www.Twitter.com/WatchMojo, http://instagram.com/watchmojo and http://www.Facebook.com/WatchMojo. Also, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Special thanks to our users Miroljub Milisavljevic, Charles Parisé, Jimmy McKee, Georgina Bransfield, perryhigh, Jerome Magajes, Matthew Buonaccorsi, Oakley.24, agonstark, Mara Steinhardt and www.google.com/ for submitting the idea on our Suggestions Page at WatchMojo.com/suggest
Check out the voting page here,
http://watchmojo.com/suggest/Top+10+Movies+from+Japan
If you want to suggest an idea for a WatchMojo video, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Want a WatchMojo cup, mug, t-shirts, pen, sticker and even a water bottle? Get them all when you order your MojoBox gift set here:
http://watchmojo.com/store/
WatchMojo is a leading producer of reference online video content, covering the People, Places and Trends you care about.
We update DAILY with 2-3 Top 10 lists, Origins, Biographies, Versus clips on movies, video games, music, pop culture and more!

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of this era and resting the new wave's duration on it in retrospect seems to result in limiting our insight into this exciting and influential era of Japanese cinema. The Japanese new wave was more about a film culture reacting to its traditional heritage, rather than a bunch of like-minded filmmakers launching a movement based on creative/political solidarity - and this cultural reaction was happening long before Shochiku attempted to claim it for a commercial PR campaign. For us, defining this era on what was essentially manufactured, diverts attention from what was so genuine about it.

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of this era and resting the new wave's duration on it in retrospect seems to result in limiting our insight into this exciting and influential era of Japanese cinema. The Japanese new wave was more about a film culture reacting to its traditional heritage, rather than a bunch of like-minded filmmakers launching a movement based on creative/political solidarity - and this cultural reaction was happening long before Shochiku attempted to claim it for a commercial PR campaign. For us, defining this era on what was essentially manufactured, diverts attention from what was so genuine about it.

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata stands on the brink of war.

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata stands on the brink of war.

Top 10 Movies from Japan

One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all over. Joinhttp://www.WatchMojo.com as we count down our picks for the Top 10 Japanese Films. Check us out at http://www.Twitter.com/WatchMojo, http://instagram.com/watchmojo and http://www.Facebook.com/WatchMojo. Also, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Special thanks to our users Miroljub Milisavljevic, Charles Parisé, Jimmy McKee, Georgina Bransfield, perryhigh, Jerome Magajes, Matthew Buonaccorsi, Oakley.24, agonstark, Mara Steinhardt and www.google.com/ for submitting the idea on our Suggestions Page at WatchMojo.com/suggest
Check out the voting page here,
http://watchmojo.com/sug...

The Way to School (Japanese Movie - 2014) - 학교 가는길

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

20 essential Japanese New Wave films

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of t...

Way of the Ninja (Shinobidô) [Eng-sub] - Japanese Full Movie

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata sta...

Top 10 Movies from Japan

One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all o...

One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all over. Joinhttp://www.WatchMojo.com as we count down our picks for the Top 10 Japanese Films. Check us out at http://www.Twitter.com/WatchMojo, http://instagram.com/watchmojo and http://www.Facebook.com/WatchMojo. Also, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Special thanks to our users Miroljub Milisavljevic, Charles Parisé, Jimmy McKee, Georgina Bransfield, perryhigh, Jerome Magajes, Matthew Buonaccorsi, Oakley.24, agonstark, Mara Steinhardt and www.google.com/ for submitting the idea on our Suggestions Page at WatchMojo.com/suggest
Check out the voting page here,
http://watchmojo.com/suggest/Top+10+Movies+from+Japan
If you want to suggest an idea for a WatchMojo video, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Want a WatchMojo cup, mug, t-shirts, pen, sticker and even a water bottle? Get them all when you order your MojoBox gift set here:
http://watchmojo.com/store/
WatchMojo is a leading producer of reference online video content, covering the People, Places and Trends you care about.
We update DAILY with 2-3 Top 10 lists, Origins, Biographies, Versus clips on movies, video games, music, pop culture and more!

One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all over. Joinhttp://www.WatchMojo.com as we count down our picks for the Top 10 Japanese Films. Check us out at http://www.Twitter.com/WatchMojo, http://instagram.com/watchmojo and http://www.Facebook.com/WatchMojo. Also, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Special thanks to our users Miroljub Milisavljevic, Charles Parisé, Jimmy McKee, Georgina Bransfield, perryhigh, Jerome Magajes, Matthew Buonaccorsi, Oakley.24, agonstark, Mara Steinhardt and www.google.com/ for submitting the idea on our Suggestions Page at WatchMojo.com/suggest
Check out the voting page here,
http://watchmojo.com/suggest/Top+10+Movies+from+Japan
If you want to suggest an idea for a WatchMojo video, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Want a WatchMojo cup, mug, t-shirts, pen, sticker and even a water bottle? Get them all when you order your MojoBox gift set here:
http://watchmojo.com/store/
WatchMojo is a leading producer of reference online video content, covering the People, Places and Trends you care about.
We update DAILY with 2-3 Top 10 lists, Origins, Biographies, Versus clips on movies, video games, music, pop culture and more!

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of this era and resting the new wave's duration on it in retrospect seems to result in limiting our insight into this exciting and influential era of Japanese cinema. The Japanese new wave was more about a film culture reacting to its traditional heritage, rather than a bunch of like-minded filmmakers launching a movement based on creative/political solidarity - and this cultural reaction was happening long before Shochiku attempted to claim it for a commercial PR campaign. For us, defining this era on what was essentially manufactured, diverts attention from what was so genuine about it.

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of this era and resting the new wave's duration on it in retrospect seems to result in limiting our insight into this exciting and influential era of Japanese cinema. The Japanese new wave was more about a film culture reacting to its traditional heritage, rather than a bunch of like-minded filmmakers launching a movement based on creative/political solidarity - and this cultural reaction was happening long before Shochiku attempted to claim it for a commercial PR campaign. For us, defining this era on what was essentially manufactured, diverts attention from what was so genuine about it.

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata stands on the brink of war.

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata stands on the brink of war.

The Way to School (Japanese Movie - 2014) - 학교 가는길

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

published: 01 Sep 2016

20 essential Japanese New Wave films

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of t...

published: 02 Jan 2015

Japanese Movies The Life Kingship 2016 18+ # 6

published: 11 Aug 2016

Japan Movies | Shinobido - Ninja | Japan Movies full HD

japan movies has a history that spans more than 100 years. Japan has one of the oldest and largest film industries in the world; as of 2010, it was the fourth largest by number of feature films produced.[7] In 2011 Japan produced 411 feature films that earned 54.9% of a box office total of US$2.338 billion.[8] Movies have been produced in Japan since 1897, when the first foreign cameramen arrived. In a ranking of the best films produced in Asia by Sight & Sound, Japan made up eight of the top twelve, with Tokyo Story ranked number one. Japan has won theAcademy Award for the Best Foreign Language Film four times, again more than any other country in Asia.

Way of the Ninja (Shinobidô) [Eng-sub] - Japanese Full Movie

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata sta...

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of this era and resting the new wave's duration on it in retrospect seems to result in limiting our insight into this exciting and influential era of Japanese cinema. The Japanese new wave was more about a film culture reacting to its traditional heritage, rather than a bunch of like-minded filmmakers launching a movement based on creative/political solidarity - and this cultural reaction was happening long before Shochiku attempted to claim it for a commercial PR campaign. For us, defining this era on what was essentially manufactured, diverts attention from what was so genuine about it.

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of this era and resting the new wave's duration on it in retrospect seems to result in limiting our insight into this exciting and influential era of Japanese cinema. The Japanese new wave was more about a film culture reacting to its traditional heritage, rather than a bunch of like-minded filmmakers launching a movement based on creative/political solidarity - and this cultural reaction was happening long before Shochiku attempted to claim it for a commercial PR campaign. For us, defining this era on what was essentially manufactured, diverts attention from what was so genuine about it.

Japan Movies | Shinobido - Ninja | Japan Movies full HD

japan movies has a history that spans more than 100 years. Japan has one of the oldest and largest film industries in the world; as of 2010, it was the fourth l...

japan movies has a history that spans more than 100 years. Japan has one of the oldest and largest film industries in the world; as of 2010, it was the fourth largest by number of feature films produced.[7] In 2011 Japan produced 411 feature films that earned 54.9% of a box office total of US$2.338 billion.[8] Movies have been produced in Japan since 1897, when the first foreign cameramen arrived. In a ranking of the best films produced in Asia by Sight & Sound, Japan made up eight of the top twelve, with Tokyo Story ranked number one. Japan has won theAcademy Award for the Best Foreign Language Film four times, again more than any other country in Asia.

japan movies has a history that spans more than 100 years. Japan has one of the oldest and largest film industries in the world; as of 2010, it was the fourth largest by number of feature films produced.[7] In 2011 Japan produced 411 feature films that earned 54.9% of a box office total of US$2.338 billion.[8] Movies have been produced in Japan since 1897, when the first foreign cameramen arrived. In a ranking of the best films produced in Asia by Sight & Sound, Japan made up eight of the top twelve, with Tokyo Story ranked number one. Japan has won theAcademy Award for the Best Foreign Language Film four times, again more than any other country in Asia.

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata stands on the brink of war.

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata stands on the brink of war.

Top 10 Movies from Japan

One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all over. Joinhttp://www.WatchMojo.com as we count down our picks for the Top 10 Japanese Films. Check us out at http://www.Twitter.com/WatchMojo, http://instagram.com/watchmojo and http://www.Facebook.com/WatchMojo. Also, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Special thanks to our users Miroljub Milisavljevic, Charles Parisé, Jimmy McKee, Georgina Bransfield, perryhigh, Jerome Magajes, Matthew Buonaccorsi, Oakley.24, agonstark, Mara Steinhardt and www.google.com/ for submitting the idea on our Suggestions Page at WatchMojo.com/suggest
Check out the voting page here,
http://watchmojo.com/suggest/Top+10+Movies+from+Japan
If you want to suggest an idea for a WatchMojo video, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Want a WatchMojo cup, mug, t-shirts, pen, sticker and even a water bottle? Get them all when you order your MojoBox gift set here:
http://watchmojo.com/store/
WatchMojo is a leading producer of reference online video content, covering the People, Places and Trends you care about.
We update DAILY with 2-3 Top 10 lists, Origins, Biographies, Versus clips on movies, video games, music, pop culture and more!

The Way to School (Japanese Movie - 2014) - 학교 가는길

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

8:42

Top 20 Japanese Films

from 1949 to the 2000's- everything from Kurosawa to Takeshi Kitano, 'Grave of the Firefli...

20 essential Japanese New Wave films

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of this era and resting the new wave's duration on it in retrospect seems to result in limiting our insight into this exciting and influential era of Japanese cinema. The Japanese new wave was more about a film culture reacting to its traditional heritage, rather than a bunch of like-minded filmmakers launching a movement based on creative/political solidarity - and this cultural reaction was happening long before Shochiku attempted to claim it for a commercial PR campaign. For us, defining this era on what was essentially manufactured, diverts attention from what was so genuine about it.

5:07

Top 5 Best Japanese Films of 2014

Corrie picks the top five best Japanese films of 2014.
What are yours?
Leave your thought...

Way of the Ninja (Shinobidô) [Eng-sub] - Japanese Full Movie

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata stands on the brink of war.

Top 10 Movies from Japan

One of the oldest and largest film industries in the world features animation, samurais, period pieces and giant monsters, with action and drama sprinkled all over. Joinhttp://www.WatchMojo.com as we count down our picks for the Top 10 Japanese Films. Check us out at http://www.Twitter.com/WatchMojo, http://instagram.com/watchmojo and http://www.Facebook.com/WatchMojo. Also, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Special thanks to our users Miroljub Milisavljevic, Charles Parisé, Jimmy McKee, Georgina Bransfield, perryhigh, Jerome Magajes, Matthew Buonaccorsi, Oakley.24, agonstark, Mara Steinhardt and www.google.com/ for submitting the idea on our Suggestions Page at WatchMojo.com/suggest
Check out the voting page here,
http://watchmojo.com/suggest/Top+10+Movies+from+Japan
If you want to suggest an idea for a WatchMojo video, check out our interactive Suggestion Tool at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest :)
Want a WatchMojo cup, mug, t-shirts, pen, sticker and even a water bottle? Get them all when you order your MojoBox gift set here:
http://watchmojo.com/store/
WatchMojo is a leading producer of reference online video content, covering the People, Places and Trends you care about.
We update DAILY with 2-3 Top 10 lists, Origins, Biographies, Versus clips on movies, video games, music, pop culture and more!

The Way to School (Japanese Movie - 2014) - 학교 가는길

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

8:42

Top 20 Japanese Films

from 1949 to the 2000's- everything from Kurosawa to Takeshi Kitano, 'Grave of the Firefli...

20 essential Japanese New Wave films

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of this era and resting the new wave's duration on it in retrospect seems to result in limiting our insight into this exciting and influential era of Japanese cinema. The Japanese new wave was more about a film culture reacting to its traditional heritage, rather than a bunch of like-minded filmmakers launching a movement based on creative/political solidarity - and this cultural reaction was happening long before Shochiku attempted to claim it for a commercial PR campaign. For us, defining this era on what was essentially manufactured, diverts attention from what was so genuine about it.

5:07

Top 5 Best Japanese Films of 2014

Corrie picks the top five best Japanese films of 2014.
What are yours?
Leave your thought...

Way of the Ninja (Shinobidô) [Eng-sub] - Japanese Full Movie

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata stands on the brink of war.

The Way to School (Japanese Movie - 2014) - 학교 가는길

Directed by Goo Joong-hee (구중회), Lee Kyeong-mook (이경묵)
•Documentary
71min | Release date in South Korea : 2014/11/27
SynopsisMinus 20 degrees celcius, 20 days of self-mortification, icy roads, sleeping outside and heavy shoulders; the story of a father who walks for his child starts now!
The Himalayas are covered in snow. Children go to school by crossing the Chaddar, which is an icy road that opens once a year. These children cross the Chaddar in the arms of their father even though it's dangerous enough that some people die trying to cross it. Once the ice melts he can't see his children for a year but the father crosses the Chaddar once again for the dreams of his children.

30:01

20 essential Japanese New Wave films

Black Country Cinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pro...

20 essential Japanese New Wave films

Black CountryCinema's 20 most essential films from the Japanese New Wave,
Excuse any pronunciation errors, if you have the heart to anyway.
Also by Hiroshi, I'm referring to Hiroshi Shimizu .
***
Just a quick note about why the video doesn't conform to the '1960 to 1969' timeline of the new wave that most experts use. This is because for us, this timeline was really just Shochiku attempting to manufacture a type of ownership on a phenomenon that was already happening in Japanese cinema at the time. 'Crazed Fruit' and 'The PunishmentRoom' though commonly branded as proto-new wave, were expressing all of the characteristics that Shochiku's 'three big bothers' (Yoshida, Oshima and Imamura) would later use. In a sense, Shochiku only had a semantic type of ownership on the initiation of this era and resting the new wave's duration on it in retrospect seems to result in limiting our insight into this exciting and influential era of Japanese cinema. The Japanese new wave was more about a film culture reacting to its traditional heritage, rather than a bunch of like-minded filmmakers launching a movement based on creative/political solidarity - and this cultural reaction was happening long before Shochiku attempted to claim it for a commercial PR campaign. For us, defining this era on what was essentially manufactured, diverts attention from what was so genuine about it.

Japan Movies | Shinobido - Ninja | Japan Movies full HD

japan movies has a history that spans more than 100 years. Japan has one of the oldest and largest film industries in the world; as of 2010, it was the fourth largest by number of feature films produced.[7] In 2011 Japan produced 411 feature films that earned 54.9% of a box office total of US$2.338 billion.[8] Movies have been produced in Japan since 1897, when the first foreign cameramen arrived. In a ranking of the best films produced in Asia by Sight & Sound, Japan made up eight of the top twelve, with Tokyo Story ranked number one. Japan has won theAcademy Award for the Best Foreign Language Film four times, again more than any other country in Asia.

Way of the Ninja (Shinobidô) [Eng-sub] - Japanese Full Movie

End of the Muromachi period – the late 16th century: The power of the Ashikaga government is on the decline after the Ōnin/Bunmei civil war. Civil unrest is on the rise and conflict rocks province after province. Even Utakata, long peacefully ruled by the House of Ichijō, is now threatened. It was thought that the combined protection of the House of Ichijō and the AsukaNinja would preserve the peace in Utakata. But this time of peace came to an end when the Asuka Ninja clan was destroyed in a single night... The provincial lords, who had been watching and waiting for an opportunity to strike at Utakata, wasted no time in making their moves. And they were accompanied by rival ninja clans hoping to take the place of the Asuka Ninja. Besieged by rival governments and ninja clans, Utakata stands on the brink of war.

Japanese Movies 2017 - Best Action Movies - Full H...

Hollywood Romantic Movie 2016 - Japanese movies Ai...

Best Japanese Movie (2017) | Romance Comedy Drama ...

The Way to School (Japanese Movie - 2014) - 학교 가는길...

20 essential Japanese New Wave films...

Japanese Movies The Life Kingship 2016 18+ # 6...

Japan Movies | Shinobido - Ninja | Japan Movies f...

JAPANESE Movie I love my sister Full [ Eng sub ]...

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Way of the Ninja (Shinobidô) [Eng-sub] - Japanese ...

When the sun dims dramatically Monday morning, that would be like an entire power plant unit shutting down for the Lone Star State's electricity grid. The much-anticipated solar eclipse will wipe out about 600 megawatts worth of electricity generation from Texas' growing solar power industry, according to officials with ERCOT, which manages the Texas grid.&nbsp; ... "That is not very much," she said about eclipse's influence ... ....

Multiple media reports Thursday reported a van crashed into dozens of people in the center of Barcelona Thursday killing two and injuring several people. Local Spanish media say two armed men have entered a restaurant after a van crashed into a crowd of people, according to Reuters, and police consider the incident to be terror related. Local media reports say two people were killed instantly when struck by the van....

The Guardian reported that police announced one person was arrested in relation to the attack on Thursday where someone drove a white van through the busy, pedestrian area of Las Ramblas in Barcelona, Spain which has left at least 13 dead, and more than 50 injured ...Police said that the number of the dead was "bound to rise" since at least 50 people were injured after the attack, interior minister for Catalonia, Joaquim Form said ... ... U.S....

The number of asylum seekers who are illegally crossing into Canada from the United States more than tripled last month, according to new data released on Thursday by the Canadian government which hints at the deep fears that migrants have about the recent U.S. administration immigration crackdown ...The RoyalCanadian Mounted Police said that an additional 3,800 asylum seekers were arrested crossing the U.S ... "It's not a crisis ... ....

Islamic State militants have claimed responsibility for an act of terrorism in which a van struck and killed at least a dozen people on Barcelona’s most famous avenue Thursday, Reuters reported Thursday.Carles Puigdemont, the head of the Spanish region of Catalonia, said at least 80 people had been taken to hospital and around 12 had died. Officials remain unsure how many attackers were involved in the incident ... She told La Vanguardia....

A DOCUMENTARY aired by Japan's public broadcaster NHK on Sunday showing the atrocities inflicted by Unit 731, a covert biological and chemical warfare research and development unit of the Japanese army, on Chinese during World War II has triggered calls for deeper reflection on the country's wartime past ... The documentary, dubbed The Truth of Harbin Unit 731, marks a praiseworthy move to teach Japanese rightists a history lesson....

The Japanese statement comes as an endorsement of the Indian position that China has violated agreements with India and Bhutan in attempting to build a road through Doklam plateau, which is part of Bhutan, a development that would be a serious disadvantage to India's military defences. Japanese ambassador Kenji Hiramatsu's observation on Doklam ......

One of those events took place at a Featherston Prisoner of War camp on February 22, 1943 where a sit-down strike by Japanese soldiers ended in the deaths of 48 inmates and one guard. "The museum sort of had artefacts telling that story but they didn't feel it was being told well from the Japanese perspective," says Gallagher, 42....

Sometimes, especially when space is tight, it helps if the couch can double as two armchairs and a coffee table, and even storage shelves, as is the case with one Japanese camping couch popular among city dwellers. The multifunctional CampCouch is made by the upscale Japanese brand Snow Peak, which recently opened boutiques in Portland, Ore., and in the trendy SoHo section of New York....

NARITA, Japan... The legislation was controversial given the still strong pacifist leanings of many Japanese and resulted in rare large-scale street protests in front of the parliament building and Abe’s office ... That struck a raw nerve for many Japanese, whose country suffered two US atomic bomb attacks at the closing days of the war in 1945 ... "US ability to defend our allies like Japan is beyond question," he said ... —AFP. ....